T X
THE
ALDEN PROCESS
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■' PNEUMATIC EVAPORATION
PRESERVING AND PERFECTING
Fruits, Vegetables, Meats, Fish, Etc.
Our improved apparatus will do one-third more work than that erected in
1874, while our prices have been materially reduced. A portion of the pur-
chase money may be paid in the products of the Alden factories. The Alden
is the oldest, the best and the cheapest process known for preserving fruits,
vegetables, meats, etc. It would be unwise to purchase the new and untried
dryers before they have demonstrated their superiority by a trial of at least
one year's regular work
Caution ! — We propose to protect our interests and the interests of those
purchasing from us, and shall prosecute, to the extent of the law, all persons
buying or using any infringements of Alden apparatus and process.
CO
CO
SAN FRANCISCO;
ALDEN FRUIT PRESERVING COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA,
42G Montgoniei'y Street.
4
CIRCXJX.^R
Idcii fruit Drcfjcruiitig I^^^^P^^^H
OF CALIFORNIA.
1876.
The experience of the past has strengthened our confidence in the proc-ess
\vhich secures the same market lor succulent products that exists for wheat and
wool, viz:
THE WORLD FOR A MARKET, AND OUR OWN TIME TO SELL.
The business of evaporating fruits and vegetables, so as to render them capa-
ble of shipment to any market in the world, with an indefinite time of transit, and
still preserve them with all their desirable qualities, has now assumed a very
important place among the prominent and legitimate industries of our growing
country.
The Alden Process has passed the experimental stage, and is now so well
known and thoroughly established, that its value to producer and consumer is
generally recognized. During the past four years, more than 200 Alden facto-
ries have been established in the United States, all of which are in full opera-
tion in the proper season, producing articles not only cheaper, but also more
nearly resembling fresh fruit than any other, and it is the only method of pres-
ervation that has risen to sufficient dignity and importance to command for its
products a distinctive recognition and remunerative prices in the markets of the
world. It is, therefore, only necessary for us to keep the public informed of
our improvements in simplifying and cheapening, without entering into any
lengthy arguments respecting its value and great superiority over all other
methods.
We are prepared to show how all the valuable qualities of a ton of apples
can be placed in an imperishable condition and delivered in Liverpool at a
gross cost of not more than twenty dollars, and we claim that our processed
apples are better than the fresh apples shipped from the Atlantic States to Liver-
pool, in such large quantities, selling there at $52 per ton, leaving a difterence
of over S30 per ton in favor of the Alden apple. We have purposely chosen
the least profitable article evaporated, sending it to a distant market in the face
of unusual competition, to show to what vast proportions we may expect the
trade to grow.
4ei(iiiiU
Even in the midst of the fresh fruit season, consumers in San Francisco can
buy Alden Fruit cheaper, (when there is any in the market) than its equivalent
of fresh fruit at retail.
COST AS COMPARSD 'WITH OTHER METHODS OP PRESERVING.
Paring and slicing require the same labor and room for all methods, and
there is no way of disposing of fruit with less trouble and expense than to spread
it on our screens. Tnen, one-fourth of a cord of wood, or its equivalent o^
coal, will run one Evaporator, at a proper degree of heat, for twenty-four
hours, and will expel the moisture from four thousand pounds of fruit. This
cost of fuel does not vary much from the cost of extra labor to spread and
gather sun-dried fruit. So we may say that the real difference in cost between
the two systems rests in the interest upon the original cost of an Alden factory.
The practical business man will consider rather the percentage of profit
yielded by the year's work, than the first cost of the apparatus ; it is enough for
him to know that there is a demand for the goods, and that the business will
"pay."' That the Alden business does pay, is demonstrated by the facts that
the goods find a ready sale at remunerative prices, and that many new factories
are started every year. Alden goods are better and cheaper than sun-dried or
canned fruits, because, we buy direct from the orchard when just ripe enough,
yet perfectly fresh and unbruised, and we cure-preserve {not dry) the fruit ; and
as all the work is done under cover, in a few hours' time the disgustingly un-
wholesome deposits of insects and dust are excluded. The natural fresh color
and flavor remain in it, and instead of deteriorating, or wasting any of the
valuable qualities, we convert a pirt of the starch into sugar, so that in cooking
one-half the sugar necessary for fresh fruit is ample for these "raisined" products
of the Alden process. On the other hand, only such fruits as won't sell fresh
are used for sun-drv-ing, and the work is generally done without regard to clean-
liness. While it remains exposed in the open air about 1 5 days, to insects and
dust, fermentadon takes place which entirely destroys the saccharine matter,
changing the color, texture and flavor, and when prepared for cooking the
necessarv washing wastes considerable of the substance; besides a large part of
the weight of ordinar}- dried fruit is dust, and what is used of such articles is
tough, sour, indigestible, and unfit for human food. Upon the average^ the prices
for the Alden goods are about three times those 0/ common dried fruit.
THE REAL COMPETITION IS "WITH CANNED FRUITS.
The business of canning fruits and vegetables has assumed immense propor-
tions, and millions of cans of peaches, tomatoes, corn, etc., are annually
packed in the United States. That the Alden goods will finally take the place
of canned goods, there is now no room to doubt; and they are destined to find
a demand as much larger than canned goods ever had, as the price is more rea-
sonable and the product better. The cost of tin cans is, in some instances,
nearly four times the cost of the fruit to fill them, and the loss through leak-
age cannot be reduced in practice below ten per cent. Our packages cost fai
less than the outside cases for the cans, and onr /nighlh, on the average, ab(jut
one-tenth. This item of freight alone is worthy of careful consideration. To
illustrate : one case of '' Alden onions'' weighing 58 lbs. gross, is equivalent, for
all culinary purposes, to 550 lbs., or five bags of fresh ; one case of " Alden
peas" weighing 43 lbs., is equivalent to, and will go as far in family use, as
seven cases of canned peas weighing 350 lbs. The same rule will apply to all
the fruits and vegetables prepared by this process. Canning is generally done
in cities. Fruits for the city are picked from the trees before fully ripe, and the
cannens use the cheapest of them. The bulk of the articles that go into cans
are bruised, wilted, and often in an advanced stage of decomposition. By cook-
ing and doctoring them with cheap sugar, and excluding the air, decay is arrested,
but they have lost their fruity flavor, which no art can restore. The smallest
opening in the can admitting air, quickly destroys the contents. Canned goods,
when opened, must be used at once. Not so with Alden goods — you can open
the package, remove the quantity you wish to use, without deteriorating the
remainder. They will keep for years in any climate.
FRUIT IN TIN CANS POISONOUS.
Read what the 'Qo^ion Journal of Chemistry has to say on this point :
"The impression prevails among those who freely use fruits put up in
tin cans, that they are injured thereby, and this impression is in many cases
correct. We have long contended that all preserved fruits and vegetables should
be dried, or stored in glass, and that no 7?ietal of any kind should be brought
in contact with them. All fruits contain more or less of vegetable acids, and
others that are highly corrosive are often formed by fermentation, and the me-
talic vessels are considerably acted upon. Tin cans are held together by solder,
an alloy into which lead enters largely. This metal is easily corroded bv vege-
table acids, and poisonous salts are formed. Undoubtedly many persons are
greatly injured by eating tomatoes, peaches, etc., which have been placed in
tin cans, and we advise our friends to discontinue the use of such articles."
CAN WE COMPETE WITH EASTERN MANUFACTURERS ?
Yes ; if we woxk /or and maintain the highest standard of excellence. Herein
lies the road to certain success. If we produce a uniformly good article, we
can always realize a good price, and successfully compete with Eastern and
European manufacturers ; and there is no mystery about the Alden business ;
any person of ordinary capacity can understand and manage it successfully. It
only requires carelul application.
jMany of the factories in the Eastern States produce nothing but apples, porn,
and pumpkins, and nowhere east of the Rocky Mountains can Plums, Prunes,
Apricots, Figs and Raisin-grapes be successfully raised. In these fruits Cali-
fornia has a monopoly, and the prediction is not unreasonable that in a few
years we will sup{)ly the $19,000,000 worth of such dried fruits annuallv im-
ported into the United Slates. All our fruits and vegetables are larger and
smoother, contain more saccharine matter, and the percentage of yield is largely
in our favor. Then, too, our working season is much longer, and we are
blessed with an entire immunity from bhght, the curculio and other insects.
As the business of raising and curing such fruits is both respectable and profi-
table, we cannot too often urge people to plant largely o( ihe Jiner varieties, such
as plums, prunes, figs, peaches, apricots, raisin grapes and Zante currants.
There is no danger of overstocking the market with such articles, when pro-
perly cured and put in attractive packages. With the exception of peaches,
none of the fruits named can be successfully raised East of the Rocky Moun-
tains, and even the peach tree is a more regular and certain bearer in Califor-
nia than in Deleware, which is at present the great peach orchard of the United
States, and produced in the past season 10,000,000 baskets of peaches of thirty
pounds each, which, at twenty-five cents per basket, would amount to $2,500,-
000, There is not here the market for fresh fruits that exists and is within
reach of the Deleware orchardist, but Philadelphia and New York can be sup-
plied with Alden peaches as cheaply from California as from Deleware. Nice
Alden peaches are in demand in the Eastern markets at from thirty-five to fifty
cents per pound, currency.
Can these fruits be raised here with profit at one cent per pound ? We think
so, and offer the following as the reason for our faith : one hundred and thirty
trees to the acre, and one hundred pounds of fruit to the tree, is a low estimate,
and vet in will yield $130 per acre, at one cent per pound. And if the curing
factorv is located in, or near the orchard, there will be no outlay for boxes,
freio'ht, insurance and commissions, nor can there be any loss from waste.
These fruits — take the prune for example, which yields one pound from three —
can be cured at an expense, for labor, fuel, boxes, etc., of three cents per
pound, making the total cost of Alden prunes, which are infinitely superior to
the imported article, six cents per pound. These prunes could then be af-
forded at ten cents per pound, which would be within the means of the poorer
classes. This estimate would leave a handsome profit for the grower, the manu-
facturer and the merchant. At present the factories pay two and a half cents
for the prunes and plums, and sell them at from eighteen to thirty cents per
pound. The present great drawback is that these finer varieties of fruits are
not yet raised in as large quantities as could be desired. According to the
Survevor General's report, there were over a million and a half of apple,
and onlv twenty-two thousand prune trees in the State in 1874. Farmers are
satisfied with one-half to one cent per pound for their apples, and we predict
that the time will come when they will sell their prunes, etc., for one cent per
pound, or less, and then make more money than can be realized from wheat
or stock raising. A prune tree will not bear as many pounds as an apple tree,
but an acre will carry more trees of the varieties above named than of apple trees,
and the result in weight is about the same, while in point of commercial value
the difference is vastly in favor of the plums, prunes, etc.
The first, simplest and best method of disposing of the fruit crop is to sell
on the ground, receive your check and draw your money daily, or, at longest,
weekly. A sure thing is the best thing for the grower. By adopting the Alden
process of preserving, the grower can hold his products for a remunerative
market, instead of being forced by the perishable condition of his fruits into a
glutted market, so often artificially made by the intentional movements of
dealers.
There is always a market for first-class dried and conserved fruits, and the
demand for American fruits of this description is rapidly increasing in the for-
eign market, and will be much more rapid when brands are found of a uni-
form and reliable quality.
HINTS FOR LOCAL MERCHANTS AND LAND 0"WNERS.
All the finer varieties of fruits can be raised in your locality, and if you want
business to increase, and purchasers for your land, get an Alden factory estab-
lished in your midst. Each evaporator will work up loo tons of fruit in about
four months, and the product will be worth at the factory at least S 10,000. No
manufacturing business requiring so small an outlay, will do so much for your
place. The money expended for fuel, labor, fruit, etc., is all distributed among
your own citizens, and no other business is so likely to grow, for people will
resurrect their old orchards, and plant new ones, when you show them a relia-
ble market for their fruit. More fruit trees will be planted this Winter in the
locality where Alden factories have been in operation during the past season,
than in any former year. People have discovered that fruit ra.is'mg zvi/I pay bet-
ter than wheat, without exhausting the soil, and they appreciate, too, that the
raising of such commercial fruit is the highest agriculture. Nothing has such
a tendency to enhance the value of land, for it renders land capable of produc-
ing at least ten times the income that it would bring in grain or in stock. The
Alden business could be introduced with great advantage in young colonies.
We think that five families, starting with one evaporator, and cultivating ten
acres each, could raise enough vegetables to make a successful run for the first
season. The vegetables and small fruits can be raised between the rows of
trees in a young orchard, on moist land, or where water for irrigation can be
obtained ; then with ten acres each of plums and prunes, which commence
bearing in three years, the colonists would have a large and certain income —
in fact be rich.
Of course it would be better to start on a larger scale, and so realize a part
of the profit on the increased value of the adjoining lands, but we have outlined
what can be done with small beginnings — a rare thing for Californians to notice.
THE GAIN OP ONE YEAR'S EXPERIENCE.
The Alden business is in its infancy, and a great deal may yet be learned.
A little experience will develope many improvements, and cut down expenses
of operating a factory. This may be illustrated by reference to the work done at
San Lorenzo during 1873 and 1874 ; in the former year, that factory was in
operation nearly six months, and evaporated 783,521 pounds of fruits, while
during 1874, iti less than four months time, 1,013,689 pounds of the same kind
of fruits were evaporated, showing an increase of 30 per cent.; add to this the
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decrease in the expense accounts, aggregating i,ioo, according to the report of
the Superintendent, and we have a very handsome gain as the result of one
year's experience.
Another encouraging feature of this business is the fact that the price of Alden
goods is gradually advancing. The first Alden peaches offered in Philadelphia,
four years ago, brought only 26 cents per pound. They are in great demand
now in all the market centres in the East, at from 35 to 4 5 cents per pound, ac-
cording to quality. The San Francisco price for peaches last year was 25
cents; this year they command 30 to 35 cents, and the supply has long since
been exhausted. Alden apples sold last year at 10 and 12 cents; this year
they sell readily at 15 to 18 cents, gold ; and in Chicago at 20 cents, currency,
LABOR-SAVING MACHINERY.
Our policy is to employ the best workmanship and to use the best material
with instructions to do everything in the most thorough manner. We have
several persons engaged in devising improvements in our apparatus, and in
labor saving machinery, such as parers and slicers, plum pitters, contrivances
for steaming vegetables, etc., and have correspondents similarly engaged in the
East. It is our design to group together as many of such improvements as
possible, and offer to purchasers from us the benefit of all.
The smaller and cheaper fruit-driers so industriously paraded before the pub-
lic, since the successful introduction of the Alden process, have caused us to
consider the question of manufacturing a cheap Alden ^Machine for persons
who prefer to operate on a small scale. A little reflection, however, has con-
vinced us that such a course would result in loss to our patrons and ruin to our
permanent interests. To be sold cheaply, the machine must be made cheaply.
Let any practical man examine the small driers, with sheet iron heaters, in the
market, and calculate how soon they will burn out, and how often the fire must
receive attention to maintain a uniform degree of heat, ivhich is so very essen-
tial; let him estimate how many square feet of radiating surface they afford, and
what the chances are for the escape of heat so soon as the lumber begins to
shrink ; let him calculate, also, what the chances are for breaking down, and
see if he can find 07ie that has been used the second season. And then let him
handle and taste the fruit dried by such small and cheap machines, and follow
them into the markets to ascertain the difference in price between them and the
Alden products, and he will need no further argument from us.
We are, however, prepared to furnish, expressly for individual fruit growers,
a smaller evaporator, of about one-half the price and capacity of our New
Model Evaporator. The smaller machine can be erected in any ordinary one-
story building at a trifling expense ; its products are equal in appearance and
quality to those of the larger machines, and it is managed with the greatest
economv and ease ; any kind of fuel can be used. We do not recommend
small machines, for reasons already given, but will give a further description,
etc., of them to persons who may wish to engage in the AlJ.en business on a
small scale.
THE NEW" ALDEN MODEL EVAPORATOR
Recommends the AKlcn Process freshly, and more forcibly than ever, to farm-
ing, fruit growing antl investing interests.
Those who now engage in the business of Pneumatic Evaporation will en-
joy the advantage of a saving of sixty per cent, on the former cost of the
Evaporating Apparatus, and will be able to carry on the manufaclure at a cur-
rent expense of only about two-thirds as great as heretofore, in consequence of
the great simplification which has been attained as the result of last year's ex-
tensive experience. We are now, therefore, enabled to offer for $1,000 our
new Model Evaporator, which has all the recent improvements, and is better
adapted to the use of individuals and communities than the old model, which
could only be made and operated at a cost which placed it beyond the reach of
those of moderate means.
DESCRIPTION OF ALDEN'S PNEUMATIC EVAPORATOR.
The apparatus used is so completely adapted to its purposes, and such com-
plete directions are given for its operation, that it can be properly used by anv
one of ordinary capacity, and unskilled, and otherwise unavailable labor (that
of boys and girls), is advantageously employed. Fruits and vegetables can be
bought, evaporated, and prepared for market the same day. The improved
TnachineiT for preparing (peeling, slicing, etc.) has proved to be perfecdy
adapted to its uses, and there is now no difficulty in producing such cleanlv cut,
unbruised fruits as are required in order to manullicture first-class evaporated
articles.
This promises a revolution in agriculture and commerce. Succulent crops
of all kinds, though worth, where marketable, four or five times the product of
the same acres in cereals, have hitherto been worthless, on a large scale, at a
little distance from city markets. Their tenderness and bulkiness forbade trans-
portation to a distant market, and thus agriculture has been generally confined
to a few hardy staples, affording but a meagre profit. Now, however, these
richest of crops (the succulent) are to be also the safest and cheapest to market.
A thousand dollars' ivorlh of apples, peaches, tomatoes, sweet potatoes, pumpkins, or
anything else of the sort, ivill not only comefroin one fourth the acres required for
one thousand dollars ivorth of ivheat, or any other of the present agricultural staples,
hut will go into one fourth the barrels, atid zvill go to any port on the globe for one-
fourth the freight.
The inventor of the Aldcn Processes expects, not without reason, to see agri-
culture raised, by his agency, from one of the worst paid pursuits of men. to
one of the most lucrative. The means of doing this, demand the urgent atten-
tion of every farmer, and of every farming coniniunitv.
THE PHILOSOPHY OF FRUIT DRYING.
To dry fruit so as to make it keep is the entire idea of many persons. Dried
fruit is dried fruit to them, and there are consumers just like them, and hence
the poorer qualities will find a market at a poor price. Others have respect to
neatness in drv-ing their fruit, and find the extra care and attention bestowed in
preserving the color uniform, without the appearance of burned or decayed
spots, amply rewarded in the extra price their fruit brings in the market. There
is a step far above this which has been stimulated by Mr. Alden, whose process,
of dessicating fruit has revealed a philosophy in the matter which is entirely
revolutionizing the old process of dessication, and which is still not generally
understood.
The true philosophy of fruit diying is to remove the water}- portions of the
fruit, so as to convert the saccharine elements into sugar, by a rapid ripening
process, in the shortest possible time without cooking the fruit. Cooking will
alter the flavor of most fresh fruits; so will a slow process of drying, giving
portions of it the taste of fruit partially decayed. The more rapidly the water)r
portions are removed when the fruit has arrived at perfection, the richer and
more permanent will be its flavor. The more completeh" it is excluded from the
oxygen of the air, the more perfect will be its color. The rapidit}' of the pro-
cess of drying increases the amount of sugar, sometimes as much as 2 5 per cent.,
and the increase of sugar will be just in proportion to the rapidity with which
the fluid portions of the fruit are removed, while the fruit remains uninjured by
heat.
Every one who has boiled the sap of sugar maple, or juice of sorgham, or the
sugar beet, knows that if these juices are left to evaporate slowly no sugar will be
formed — saccharine matter will either pass off" in evaporation or will be converted
into acetic acid — but if they are evaporated by boiling, sugar will be formed, and
the more briskly they are kept boiling, the greater the amount of sugar from a
given quantit\- of juice. The chemical change by which the starchy portions of
the fruit is converted into sugar, when the temperature is raised, is very similar
to that which takes place in the ripening of fruit on the tree under the warm
rays of the sun, but much more rapidly.
A few days in the warm sun will convert so much of the juices of the goose-
berrry and grape into sugar that the acid and astringent green fruit becomes a.
delicious luxury. A few hours when the fruit arrives at the proper stage under
proper conditions will suffice for even a greater change in the drying process-
This is a study that has only just begun to awake the attention of progressive
fruitgrowers. If the fruit is kept at a temperature of 212= it is cooked while
the evaporation is taking place, and no after care can restore the flavor once
changed by this temperature. This must be carefully kept in mind. Another
point is equally important — the surface of the dn-'mg fruit should be kept moist
and soft, so as to allow the easy and rapid passage of the internal moisture to-
the surface, and a rapid current of heated air should pass over the surface of the
fruit, while drying, to carry away the moisture. Hence it is evident that cold
air must not be admitted into any devise for dr^dng fruit, and also that a draft
must be opened above the fruit where the moisture-charged heated air will
rapidl}' pass oft". -
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It has been objected tliat fruit can never dry in a healed atmosphere liUcd with
moisture. This objection is theoretical, not philosophical or real, when the
moist air is in motion, as our philosophies taught us years ago.
Air at the freezing point, 32°, holds one 1 60th of its weight of water as vapor,
and its capacity for holding moisture is doubled with every 27° of temperature
above 32°, or the freezing point, so that at 59° of the thermometer die air will
absorb the 80th part of its weight; at 86^^ the 40th; at 113° the 20th; at 140°
loth; at 167'^, 5th; at 194°, die 2.5; and at 221'^' V. the air will absorb almost
its own weight of moisture, or nearly one pound of water to ever}- one sixth cubic
feet of air. Now it is evident that if this amount of moisture was contained in
the air at rest, the fruit would never dry. Hence the necessity of carrj-ing off
the moisture — -loaded air — as rapidly as possible by an active draft.
Another fact that needs to enter into the account: evaporation takes place at
the surface of bodies, and is influenced not only by temperature and drA-ness,
but by the stillness and density of the air in which the article to be dried is placed.
If the air be heated and at rest, as in an air tight oven, fruit will not dry,
though the dry air will be loaded with moisture. \\'ind, air in motion, is neces-
sarv to dry any substance, and more is due to the wind than to the sun in dning
the earth after a shower; so a current of heated diy air, constantly supplying the
place of the moisture charged air carried oft' b\- the draft, is the grand secret of
success in drying fruits.
NATURE OF THE ALDEN EVAPORATING PROCESS.
Pneumatic Evaporation as scientifically perfected by 'Sir. Alden, is essentially
a novel art ; not onlv distinct from, but opposite to desiccation, so called, in
chemical principles and practical results. It is a process which not only fore-
stalls decay, and which not only seizes and perpetuates the fresh flavor, color
and texture of the article (animal or vegetable) subjected to it, but which, in
doing these things, at the same time carries out the organic process of ripening
itself to an artificial perfection, on the same principles incompletely used by
Nature, and with a correspondent increase of the nutritive product.
The means employed by 'Sir. Alden to produce these results are threefold —
namely, rapid circulation of hot air, accurately adapted and graduated heat, and
at all times a considerable portion of humidity. It will be noticed that each of
these points stand directly contrary both to the process of desiccation or kiln
drying, and to that of ordinary air drying.
In all forms of life, animated and vegetative, water is the circulating medium
of life and growth, until these are perfected, and then reverses its fui:iftion, and
becomes the minister of death and decay. To absorb the water, therefore, is to
stop the integrating or disintegrating process, whichever may be going on, with
equal certainty. In the Alden process, the rapid circulation of the fresh, heated
current, first stimulates the circulation of the sap in the fruit, antl keeps up a
rapid oxygenation and super-ripe7iing of the mucous ingredients to grape sugar,
so long as any free moisture remains. At the end, the free moi.sture having
10
been partly fixed and the rest removed, the fruit or vegetable tissue remain in-
corruptible by the further access of oxygen, to indefinite time.
At first, while fresh and wet on the surface, the vegetative tissue will endure
for a few moments a high degree of heat, not only without scalding, but without
becoming heated ; just as one may pick up a living coal or snufi" a candle with
a moistened thumb and finger. As the^surface moisture evaporates, that within
is drawn forth, by the law of equilibrium, to take its place. In this manner an
internal circulation is excited and kept up throughout the process, answering to
that in living fruit on the tree, and with similar effect. The active circulation
of the acidulated and oxygenated juice, at the proper temperature, through the
mass of crude material, brings the combining atoms into contact, and is actually
found to effect a preternaturalh' rapid oxidization of the mucous or starchy in-
gredients ; " ripening" them, in other words, to saccharine matter, to the
amount, in two or three hours, of nearly twenty-five per cent, on the whole
amount of such matter .developed by weeks of ripening on the tree. This
marvellous result has been incontestably ascertained by chemical analysis of the
highest authority.
As soon, however, as the average moisture of the fruit begins to diminish in
the heated current, so as to raise its temperature, the fruit is moved upward a
regular stage, and a fresh screen of fruit is introduced in its place and beneath
it. The fresh screen of fruit takes up its quota of heat from the air current,
leaving the latter to pass upwards to the first screen, just as much less hot as the
fruit above is- less moist and less able to absorb the heat by evaporation. (All
know that evaporation is cooling.) At intervals, .scientifically adjusted, the
whole series of fruit screens in the evaporator is moved upward at once (being
carried by an endless chain), so that every screen of fruit, at every stage of its
progress, preserves a uniform projiortion of heat to moisture, and therefore a
uniform temperature. As the moisture of the fruit diminishes, so does the heat
of the air current that strikes it ; and thus the finished fruit coming out at the
top of the evaporator with the tepid and vaporous exhaust of the air current, is
actually neither cooler nor warmer than the fresh fruit while passing through
the fresh heat at the beginning.
In the course of the first five or six hours (or with some fruits and vegetables
a longer time), the first screen of fruit introduced has reached the top of the
evaporator in a finished state, proof henceforth against decay. The whole shaft
is now filled with say one thousand pounds. Going oft" finished, one screen at
a time, every few minutes, in another six hours, more or less, the whole shaft
full will be issued (giving place to as many more) in two modes ; eighty per
cent, of it, say eight hundred pounds, having flown away on the wings of the
wind as vaporized water, and two hundred pounds having been lifted oft and
laid aside by human hands as Alden Fruit, imperishable, but bright, clean and
fresh, in color and taste, as it first went in. All the moisture that has not
become chemically engaged as hydrate, in the glucose syrup that gives Alden
Fruit it peculiar soft and moist feel to the fingers, has been carried off in the
11
air. Havin£^ accomjilished its part in the ripeninf? and super-ripening process,
it is removed before it can commence pulling down what it has built up.
, THE ALDEN PROCESS
'Slay be briefly described as a method for maturing and preserving animal and
vegelalile substances, in part through evaporation, and in part through chemical
binding of their organic moisture, by exposing the same to a current of heated
and humid air, increasing in humidity, and decreasing in heat as the evapora-
tion proceeds, said current of air moving in the same direction with the articles
to be treated.
The principal part of the apparatus consists of a vertical chamber, or shaft,
twenty to twenty-five feet high, and three to five feet square, containing a series
of frames, one above another, four and one quarter inches apart, covered with
netting, and moved upward all together by endless chains. The heating appa-
ratus is placed under this chamber, from which currents of air, heated to any
required temperature, pass up, through, and around the frames. On each frame
is spread ten to twenty pounds of fruit. The lowest frame is first placed in the
chamber directly over the heat, at the bottom of the shaft, where in remains
from two to six minutes. It is then moved up four and one-quarter inches, and
another frame of fruit is placed beneath it. At regular intervals the whole series
of frames are moved upward four and one quarter inches, and a fresh frame is
put on beneath them, until the frames are all in, containing (if apples) fifteen to
thirty bushels of fruit. At this time the shaft being full, one frame is taken ofl^
at the top, and one is put in at the bottom at regular intervals, varj-ing with the
variety of fruit treated, and the thickness of the slices or pieces. Each bushel
of apples contains about forty pounds of water, which is seized by the ascending
air, and passes with it up, through, and around the fruit as the moisture is taken
gradually from it, enveloping it to the last in a cloud of vapor. The pores of
the fruit are thus kept open, free for the circulation and exit of vapor, until all
the free water is removed, the remainder (i6 per cent.) being held as dydrate.
It is well known that fruit will not mature, ripen or sweeten up, in strictly dry
weather, nor in cold wet weather. The Alden Evaporated Fruit follows the
law of nature in this respect. It does not become, therefore, a dried fruit, in
the ordinar)' acceptation of that term, but it is preserved in its own concen-
trated y'tt/ccj-, and will keep for years in any climate. The flavor is retained, and
the development of glucose, or grape sugar, is perfect.
On the other hand, a current of dry heated air applied to the cut surfaces of
fresh fruit, will form a skin or covering, which confines the acids, etc., within,
and, under a moderate heat, partial fermentation ensues, as in sun-dried fruits;
while, if the heat is too great, in a close chamber or oven, the saccharine mat-
ter is changed into caramel, or burnt sugar, the result of which is seen in the
dark-colored, partially soured, leather}', decayed, or charred fruits, found in the
market, selling for about one-half the price of the Alden goods. The cores
and skins of apples can be, at a trifling expense, converted into pure vinegar,
cider, or jellv.
12
BUILDINGS.
A balloon-frame, three-story building, say 40x32 feet, 28 feet high, with roof
of one-quarter pitch, and 7-foot cellar, will receive from 3 to 5 Evaporators, and
afford room for manufacturing purposes, storage, etc. The fruits, etc., are re-
ceived, prepared, (peeled, sliced, etc.), and put into the Evaporator on the first
story, pass upward, through the machines to the third story, where they are re-
moved from the Evaporators and thrown down through openings in the floor to
the second story, where they can be packed at leisure. Such a building will
cost from $1,000 to $1,500. Almost any ordinarv^ building can be cheaply al-
tered into a serviceable factor}'; the essential point is height, which can rapidly
be obtained by raising a small portion of the roof of a low building. A com-
mon barn can, at a small cost, be adapted to the reception of Evaporators;
small platforms, accessible by a ladder, or by cheap stairs, can be erected at
the tops of the machines, and the remainder of the building may be left entirely
open. The Company furnishes to each purchaser, without charge, plans, speci-
fications, working-drawings and directions, either for the erection of new build-
ings, or the alteration of old, and give their superintendence to the perfect erec-
tion of the Evaporators, when desired.
INSTRUCTIONS TO SUPERINTENDENTS.
Engage your fruit ahead as far as possible. Luck may bring a feast to-day,
and a famine to-morrow.
Keep a careful account of your expenditures, and a close watch of your em-
ployees.
Maintain a steady heat. This is important. We believe it can be done best
by the foreman in charge, if the fuel is placed conveniently. The fires will not
need more than two five-minute visits per hour. Thus you dispense with a
fireman.
Do not admit too much cold air on the heater. Generally you will find
about two feet of opening sufficient, and this should be divided between the
several openings.
Watch your Evaporators closely. A change in the direction or velocity of the
wind, or in the moisture of the air, aff'ects your work at once. Examine the
frames often from the middle, as well as from the upper doors, to be sure that
nothing is going wrong.
Never skip a frame nor allow cut fruit to accumulate. It will interfere with
the discipline of your employees, and impair the quality of your products.
Leave openings between the frames and evaporators on alternate sides of the
evaporator, to insure a zigzag current of the heat.
Keep the millers away/ro?n your dried fruit. That is a vital point. To secure
it you will need tight bins for storing your product, and it would be well to have
wire or mosquito netting in your doors and windows. Keep posted on the market.
It will not always pay best to work what promises the largest profit. The com-
mission merchant needs a full line and regular supply of goods, and can make
13
better sales if he lias them. Help one iviother. Factories will not stand in the
market so much upon their individual merits, as upon the general rejAitation of
Alden goods.
ALDEN FRUIT JELLY, FRUIT FLOUR AND CRYSTALLIZED FRUITS.
The prosecution ot the business is constantly developing new sources of
profit. Aldeh Fruit Jellv, made from the cores and skins of apples, etc., has
been extensively sold for the last three years, and is superior to any other in the
market. The finest qualities of crj-stallized fruits are made by immersing-
peaches, citron, melon, etc., in hot sugar syrup, rolling them in powdered sugar,
and then evaporating them. These candied products are equal to the imported
candied fruits, and command high prices. ^Making conserves and marmalade
have only began to attract the attention of fruit growers. But these methods
are designed to form an important branch of this department of industr}-, and
if consen-es and marmalade are well prepared they will largely increase the
demand for American productions, and stimulate the growing of fruit, ^\'e are
now largely dependent on the French for our conserved fruits, which are sold at
ver}- high prices, but which may just as well be prepared here. During the
past year Vegetable Flour has been introduced to the trade ; the onl}- articles
extensively treated have been pumpkins and squashes ; the pumpkin and squash
flour has been sold in large quantities at thirty cents per pound (at wholesale) and
has given unqualified satisfaction.
ALDEN RAISINS.
Several of our factories haye experimented, to some extent, 'on grapes, and
the raisins produced have given great satisfaction, both financially and other-
wise ; so much so that all the factories will, during the coming season, make
preparations for manufacturing raisins in large quantities. These raisins have
been carefully examined by competent judges, all of whom have pronounced
them excellent, ^^'e copy a few of the many favorable i)ress notices which our
raisins have received :
•'We have tasted some white Muscat raisins dried by the Alden Process at Vacaville, and
they are diffen^nt in appearance and flavor from any other raisin. They suit us better thart
any other grape we have tasted, save the Huasco cf Peru. — Aha.
Los Angeles Raisins. — ^^■e have before us samples of raisins from the Los Angeles-
Alden Fruit Preserving Company, of which Geo. B. Davis is manager. There are two kinds,
the Los Angeles Mission Grape and the White Muscat. Both will have a thorough examina-
tion. Those of the Mission variety are of medium size only, but are clean and glossy in
appearance, satisfacfory to the touch, and are sweet and rich ; possessing all the qualities
of a good cooking raisin. In proof of its marketable value is the fact that a large propor-
tion of the late crop has been sold at 15 cents per pound. A sale of 15 tons was made to
one purchaser in Arizona, at the above price.
The Muscats are of larger size and lighter color, presenting an inviting appearance, hav-
ing an excellent flavor. This variety of grape is now figuring conspicuously in the great
raisin movement, and will undoubtedly be one of the leading varieties that are to be con-
verted into raisins.
14
In conversing with a prominent retail grocer recently, he expressed the opinion that at
the expiration of the next five years, there would be no foreign raisins offered in the markets
«f this country. — Pacific Rural Press.
The foregoing is from our Circular of last year. During the past season our
expectations have been''fully realized. The raisins manufactured by the factori-
al Jackson, in Amador County, are very fine, both in flavor and color, and have
found a ready sale at good prices. The proprietors of that factoiy are Italians,
who have lived in Spain and have had some experience in manipulating grapes,
and thev have discovered the proper way to treat grapes preparatory to making
raisins bv the Alden Process. This discovery is not patented and will be com-
municated to all who purchase from us. They succeeded best with the ^luscat
of Alexandria, samples of which can be seen in our office.
An Alden Factory of five evaporators, new style, has a capacit}" of turning out
three thousand pounds of such raisins every twenty-four hours, at an expendi-
ture of 82 5.00 for labor, fuel, etc. Let us put this raisin proposition in tabular
form :
9,000 lbs. grapes, at i cent per lb S 90 00
Labor, fuel, etc 20 00
Boxes and packing 3,000 lbs. raisins 35 00
Total cost of producing same Si 4 5 00
3,000 lbs. raisins (i lb from 3) at locts.perlb $300 00
Deduct cost of producing same 145 00
Profit for 24 hours S 155 00
Profit for 30 days, of 24 hours 4.650 00
We are prepared to guarantee above results, under proper management, and
have no doubt such raisins, when once known in the market, will sell for more
than ten cents per pound. But even at that price, the result of thirty days'
operation would be ten per cent, interest upon §46,500, which ought to satisfy
any person of moderate expectations, and certainly pays better than feeding
grapes to hogs and cattle.
There are other varieties of grapes that, cured by the Alden process, are very
nice for cooking purposes, but we would advise grafting the ^luscat, Larga;
Seedless Sultana and Zante currant upon the common vines. The operation is
simple, and the new wood will bear a moderate crop the first year. The Larga
is a prolific bearer of large, luscious grapes, which make excellent raisins, yield-
ing one pound from two, though most people prefer the flavor of the INIuscat of
Alexandria.
INDIVIDUAL VERSUS CO-OPERATIVE ENTERPRISE.
L'pon this point we submit the following from the Pacific Rural Press of
October 3, 1874. =^ :h :, h= *
"It is evident that for the individual fanner to conduct a manufacturing business would be
poor policy. Such things can only be done successfully by combination, centralization and
division of labor. Even if each person attempting to carry on the business of drying fruit
15
was for a brief time succtssful, there woukl soon be such a disparity in the (luality of the
product, and so much of the poorly prepared article thrown on the market, that the repu-
tation of California dried fruits would be anything but enviable. And if for no other rea-
son than that the general good in this case would be the only sure profit of the individual,
the co-operative plan recommends itself.
The dairy-men of New York and other States were forced to it, and the result was the
establishment of large lactories on the co operative plan, which now turn out cheese of a
standard, uniform and excellent quality.
Suppose that each of the fruit growers of a certain locality was to carry his fruit on speci-
fied contract terms to a certain factory, of a size proportionate to the resources of the section
in which it was located, and conducted by a skillful superintendent of business capacity,
whose attention would be solely devoted to this specialty. The consequence would be that
the manufactured article would be of standard excellence, the farmers would be relieved
of personal embarrassment and responsibility, and the profits would be vastly increased.
The plan has been tried, and zuith success.^'
ADVANTAGES OP THE ALDEN METHOD.
^^'e copy the following from the Sacramento Record :
" The advantages of the Alden Method over canning or sun-drying are manifest. In the
first place the flavor of the fruit is retained to an almost, if not to an equal extent in the
Alden Piocess as' in the canning. For our own part, to the fruits we have tried preserved by
the Alden Process, we give the preference over canned, for table use and for cooking pur-
poses, and we think that will be the general verdict. » » * -•
By sun-drying, the fruit undergoes a complete fermentation, thereby destroying all the
natural flavor of the green fruit, and substituing dried fruit taste, so inseparable from all fruits
dried in this way. Again, it is next to impossible to conduct the business of drying in the
sun on a scale equal to the demands of California producers. This proposition needs no
proof. Experience has demonstrated this. Then, too, the insects in our peculiar climate
are destruction to the sun-dried fruit by depositing eggs on the same, while exposed to dry,
unless before packing the fruit shall be subjected to a process by which they shall be des-
troyed. This latter process would be an extra expense almost equal to the wliole expense
of the Alden Process, and then you will have an inferior article at greater cost.""
LiTTLEFlELD, WeBB & Co,
Wholesale Commission Merchants,
San Francisco, Dec. 20, 1875.
To G. \V. Deitzler, Esq.,
I^resident Alden Fruit Preserving Company of California.
Dear Sir : — In response to your enquiry of this date concerning our operations in the
Alden Fruit and Vegetables for the past year, we beg to submit the following :
We are pleased to note a steady and increasing demand for these goods — a demand
coming not alone from one quarter, but gradually extending to every section of the Pacific
Coast and Territories, as well as the Eastern and -Southern States and Europe, and pervad-
ing (though slightly as yet) the Australian colonies, who are large consumers of canned and
dried Iruits, which trade in this particular line, if it can once be secured, will form no
small item in our export lists.
We would call the attention of the Alden factories to the advisability of packing their
goods (or at least a portion of them) in attractive, handy packages, for the retail trade — say
in one and two pound paper boxes, and perhaps some five-pound packages would not be
amiss.
This still would be much more salisiactory, we imagine, to storekeepers, etc., as the
goods would not only be more convenient to handle than as present packed, but a more
attractive display could be made, which would naturally tend to increase the sule. This
16
course has been pursued, we believe, by many Eastern factories operating under the Alden
process, with satisfactory results, and we think the plan could be carried out here with
profit. While we as yet carry a full line of apples and pears, we have been compelled, in
order to supply our Iccal demand, to order certain kinds of Alden goods from the Eastern
markets, though we can see no good reason why this state of affairs should exist ; and we
trust that during the coming season the remedy will be applied, and California will not be
obliged to depend upon the East for certain descriptions of Alden goods, which can be
produced here in such abundance, and for which a good market has been found at prices
which certainly should leave a fair margin for the factory.
We have continued to devote our best care to the Alden interests, and have left nothing
imdone to introduce and make known the goods at all new points where there was likeli-
hood of sale. At the same time, however, we notice that some factories are disposed to
"chop" around and create competitive agenciesTor the sale of the goods, which policy is, in
our opinion, if long pursued, calculated to prove prejudicial to the Alden interests of the
entire coast. As we have before intimated, to secure harmony and a uniform price in the
disposal of the Alden goods, from different factories (the goods being of equal quality),
shipments should be made to one general sole agency, whereby all competition would be
prevented, and the best interests of all concerned subserved by such action.
With our best wishes for your continued success, believe us, dear sir, yours truly,
LITTLEFIELD, WEBB & CO.
GOLD MEDAL.
Report of the Committee of the California State Agricultural Society, 1874.
"Your committee beg to report, that in examining the dried fruits on exhibition, they
were highly pleased with the excellent quality and great commercial value of the fruits and
vegetables entered by Geo. W. Deitzler, President of the Alden Fruit Co., of California.
These articles are not dried in the common acceptation of the term, but are preserved in
their own juices by this peculiar process, and it is claimed will keep for years in any cli-
mate. The flavor of the fresh fruit is retained and it is free from that dark and leathery
appearance which is always found in the sun or kiln-dried fruits.
The Committee have no hesitation in expressing the opinion that as regards appearance
and flavor, the articles are the best on exhibition. The value of such fruits and vegetables
is very great.
California can produce in unlimited quantities the finest fruits and vegetables in the world,
but we have not the resident population to consume these immense productions in their
fresh state, and they will not bear transportation to distant markets ; neither can we hope
to find a remunerative market for inferior dried fruits and vegetables at home or abroad ;
but for such preserved articles as those under consideration, there is, it seems, no danger of
overstocking the market.
When we consid(n- that there are imported annually overViFTEEN million dollars' worth
of dried fruits, ail of which articles can be raised in California and placed upon the markets
in a cured condition infinitely superior to the imported articles, the importance of this indus-
try can he appreciated.
In view of these considerations we deem the articles on exhibition by the Alden Company
as worthy of special notice, and we respectfully^ recommend that the Board of Directors
award to the Company tlie Gold Medal, and give to their valuable and growing industry
every possible encouragement."
W. C. HOPPING,
ALFRED BRIGGS,
W. R. STRONG.
We are gratified to be able to state that the Society awarded to us both the
Silver and Gold Medals, and we propose to keep /hem, having no fear of competi-
tion.
SUN-DRIED FRUIT A FAILURE.
Owing to the peculiirity of our climate, a climate in wliich fruit may be dried as rapidly
and with as little expense as in any other country, the system of drying fruit in the sun is
practically a Jailure. This may strike those who have thought but little on the subject, and
who have had no experience, as a strange proposition ; but, to the practical man, the man
who has dried fruit in the sun, and kept the same any length of time before disposing
of it, and to the merchant who has been dealing in sun-dried fruits, and had box after box
returned to him, it is very plain and easily understood. Tn whatever country you dry fruits
in the sun, exposed to insects, they will deposit more or less eggs upon it. If that country
be a cold one, like the Atlantic States, for instance, the cold weather generally sets in so
early that these eggs are not hatched out in the Fall, and the fruit is consumed before the
warm weather of the following Spring ; and the consumers are none the wiser for having
consumed with the iruit millions of insects' eggs. In this State, however, these eggs hatch
out in the Fall, and very generally destroy the fruit before it is required for consumption.
Our dealers generally understand the danger of dealing in sun-dried fruit, and many of
them have suffered by so doing ; and we, in the line of our business, have also had a little
experience, which we will relate. While Secretary of the State Agricultural Society, we
made an exhibition of some of the products of our State, at the International Exposition at
Paris. At the State Fair of 1866, Briggs Bros., the extensive orchardists of Marysville,
exhibited a number of boxes of dried fruits of various kinds, put up in a good shape for
commerce. The fruit itself was in splendid order, and attracted general attention at the
Fair, and we solicited and obtained the whole to send among other articles to Paris. After
the Fair, some two months elapsed before it was time to forward the goods to New York,
and the boxes remained in a safe place undisturbed. When ready to ship, we opened one
of the boxes, and found that the fruit had turned to a mass of worms. Not one box was
found but was in the same condition.
The peculiarity of our climate, therefore, requires that our fruit be dried by artificial
means, or that all the sun-dried fruit to keep or to ship be put through some process by
which the insect's eggs may be killed. Unless subjected to some process that will effect
this, it is neither safe to the individual or good policy to ship it out of the State, or to sell
it to those who desire to keep it for Winter use. — Sacramento Record.
ALDEN FRUIT.
A careful perusal of the Alden Fruit Preserving Company's circular for 1875, together
with a critical examination of the fruits and vegetables preserved by this peculiar process,
is fully convincing that this new industry, which is already so well established and prom-
ises rapid development, will bring millions oi dollars into our State. We can raise the
finer varieties of fruits, such as peaches, plums, prunes, apricots, raisin grapes and figs, in
unlimited quantities, and these fruits can be cured by the Alden process and placed upon
the market m an imperishable condition, and infinitely superior to the miported articles.
The Alden goods have a prestige, and are becoming well known in all the great market
centers of the country, and command a high price wherever offered. These facts are
worthy the attention of persons who propose engaging in the business of fruit drying. Ex-
periments are always costly. Therefore, when the merits and utility o( an invention are
established and recognized, and the products of that invention become staple, it is well to
consider the probable cost attendant upon experimentation with imitations. There may be
other processes equally good, but of the many Iruit dryers that have been patented since
the introduction of the .\lden process, some four years ago, not one has, to our knowledge,
been put into successful operation. Our fruit growers had undoubtedly better adopt the
plan that stands, afer several years' trial, ademonstrated success, rather than to venture upon
new things whereof they can have no assurance of merit. One year's crop of fruit may
enrich a man, or the loss of it break him ; hence it is better to use a process that has been
tested, and be sure to save it. If any fruit growers are tempted to experiment, they should
require the vendors to establish the works at their own expense, and if the result show that
what has been promised is performed, and that as good an article as that made by the
Alden process is produced at no greater cost, then tlie price agreed upon should be paid.
This plan would save trouble, cost and delay to our fruit growers, and if it is not satisfac-
tory to the agents of the new fruit dryers, it is but fair to suppose that their contrivances
lack substantial merit.
Even if it were possible to succeed in making as good an article as the Alden by any-
imitative process, and at no greater cost, it cannot be supposed that goods so produced
would have an equal market value with the Alden, which would have the great advantage
of being known and appreciated by consumers. A new product, equally good, under a
new name, would meet with a comparatively slow demand.
We must have a uniformly good article, keep up the highest standard of excellence, and
so get a reputation for California dried fruit, which will always secure for it a good p:ice,
for we have the world for a market and our own time to sell. — Daily Evening Fast.
Below is given an estimate of a day's work of 24 hom-s for a factory of five
evaporators. This is founded on the experience of the past season.
PARED PEACHES.
10 tons Fruit, at $20 00 $200 00
50 Boys and GirU or Chinamen, at 75c 37 50
i^ cords Wood, at $8 cc lo 00
2 Foremen, at $ I 50 3 00
I Superintendent., 2 50
30 Boxes, at 25c 7 50
I packer, at 5 I 50 i 50
S252 00
Evaporated Peaches, 2,000 lbs , at 33c. per lb. .660 00
FRENCH PRUNES.
7 tons Fruit, at S40 $280 00
S Boys and Girls or Chinamen, at 75c 6 30
iVi cords Wood, at s8 00 10 co
Foremen and Supermtendent 5 50
Packers and Incidentals 10 00
132 Boxes, at 15c 19 80
APPLES.
10 tons Apples, at $10 per ton $100 00
Paring and Coring 320 Boxes, at 8c. per bo.x 25 to
ij^ cords of Wood, at S 8 00 10 00
2 Foremen and Superintendent 10 00
40 cases, at 25c 10 00
Packing and Incidentals 7 50
5163 10
Evaporated Apples, 2,500 lbs., at 14c per lb. ...350 00
Deduct from this the value of cores and skins, and
it will reduce the cost below 6 cents per lb.
TOMATOES.
8 tons Fruit, at §10 00 gSo 00
100 Boys and Girls or Chinamen, at 75c 75 00
i^ cords Wood, at $8 00 10 00
Foremen and Superintendent 1000
75 ten pound Boxes, at 11 cts 8 25
Packer, S2 50; Incidentals, $5 00 7 50
Yield, 4,666 lbs., at 17c. per lb.
$331 30
793 22
S190 73
\ leld, 1,000 lbs., at 75c. per lb 650 00
Contracts can be made witli Chinamen, by which the expense of paring the
fruit, etc., can be considerably reduced.
TAB E OP PRINCIPAI. ARTICLES EVAPORATED, WHOLESALE
PRICES, YIELD, ETC.
Apples
Apricots
Beef.
Cherries-
Corn
Currants
Nectarines
Onions
Peaches, pared,
Plums
Potatoes
Prunes, French
Peas
Pears
Pumpkin
Rhubarb
Squash
Tomatoes
p. —
4000 lbs.
4000
3000
4000
4000
2000
4030
2000
4000
4000
3000
3000
4000
4000
3 too
3400
3400
4000
500 lbs.
560
500
440
900
300
400
200
400
640
660
880
360
560
343
275
240
280
12K
20
16K
16/3
22
33>S
9 ,
12K
10
8/3
10
6K
6
16
16
32
40
55 ©75
30
30
40
40
45
30 @ 45
4^
8
0 I-6@I2j^
3/3
4
4
4
3
5
3 I-IO
3K @ ^¥i
2
2
4-K
19
Below we give a table showing the retail price of Alden products and of
canned goods, to which we invite your attention.
Variety.
Apples
Apricots
Heef.
Cherries
Corn
Currants
Nectarines
Onions
Peaches
Urpared Peaches
Peas
Plums
Potatoes
Prunes
Pumpkins
Pears
Grapes
Rhubarb
Squash
Tomatoes
No. ites.
Fresh equal
to I Dry.
7
5
6
0
6
4'A
Retail
Price.
$ O 20
40
50
75@i CO
40
40
50
50
40
55
35
25
40@5o
20
50
25
90
Equivalent
price per
2-Ib can.
$ o OS
25 @ 33
9
II
8
23
5
IO@I2j^
s
Actual
price per
2-lb can.
$ o 40
5°
50
5°
35
50
50
50
The above tables furnish a basis for an estimate of the direct profits of an
Alden Factory, which will be found to be invariably larger than can be realized
from any other manufacturing enterprise in California, requiring the same
amount of capital. The indirect profits to the community in which the factor-
ies are located will prove much larger, as it will enable fruit growers to utilize
all their marketable fruits, which would otherwise be a dead loss.
These estimates of yield are based, so far as possible, from the average result
of a full season's work. There is great difference in the yield of some species
of fruit. Peaches range from 7 to 14 per cent. On pears one factory reported
an average yield of 9 per cent., and another of 14 per cent.
We would ca:ll your special attention to vineyards of Mission Grapes, and
neglected or unprofitable orchards. By grafting upon the vines raisin grapes,
(the Muscat family are the best), and upon the trees the best variety for drying,
they can be made in two years very valuable. In planting an orchard, select
say an equal variety of early, medium and late fruits, so that a factory may be
kept in operation as long as possible, which will bring the best results.
ALL -WHO LIKE GOOD, CLEAN FOOD
Should examine the Alden product. We claim that they are equal to the fresh
fruit for pies, puddings and other confections, that they are superior to fresh in
ripeness, digestibility and economy, that only one-half the sugar is necessary in
cooking, because a part of the starch has been converted into sugar in the pro-
cess of evaporation. That o?ie pound of this fruit is equal to iivo of that dried or
dessicated in the ordinary way ; that it is wholly free from dirt and insects, and
that the average cost is not more than one-third that of an equivalent of canned
goods. We invite you to test carefully all these claims.
20
DIRECTIONS FOR USE.
DO NOT WASH OR RINSE.
Soak in cold or hot water. Hot water will do the work quicker.
For Cooking Corn. — (5 ozs. equal to one 2-lb. can.) Soak in water until
soft. Boil in same water, adding water as required.
For Cooking Peas. — (3 ozs. equal to one 2-lb. can.) Soak in water until
soft. Boil in same water, adding water as required.
For Cooking Apricots. — (2^- ozs. equal to i lb. fresh.) For Sauce. — Soak in
water, one pint to 2\ ozs., until soft. Cook in same water, adding one-half
the sugar ordinarily used in fresh. For Pies. — Soak and use without cooking,
putting the water with the fruit.
For Cooking Currants. — (3i ozs. equal to i lb. fresh.) — For Sauce. — Soak in
one-half pint of water, 3! ozs. until soft. Cook in same water, adding one-
half the sugar ordinarily used in fresh. For Pies. — Soak and use without
cooking, putting the water with the fruit. For Jelly. — Add 8 quarts of water to
2 pounds, and make as fresh. Result, equal to 10 lbs. of fresh fruit.
For Cooking Potatoes. — For Fried Potatoes. — Soak until soft, then drop the
slices in hot lard, and frj' until brown. For Mashed Potatoes. — Soak as before,
then boil until nearly dry.
For Cooking Pears, Plums, Apples, Peaches, Rhubarb, Onions, Etc., Etc. —
Soak in water until soft. Cook as fresh, adding water as required. If pro-
perly prepared, result is equal to fresh fruits and vegetables.
Bear in mind that from 60 to 80 per cent, of the fresh fruits and vegetables
is water, which is absent in the Alden products. You must add as much water
as we remove by evaporation, and as much more as you would in cooking the
fresh articles.
THIS BOOK IS BTTE ON THE LAST DATE
STAMPED BELOW
AN INITIAL FINE OF 25 CENTS
WILL BE ASSESSED FOR FAILURE TO RETURN |
THIS BOOK ON THE DATE DUE. THE PENALTY
WILL INCREASE TO 50 CENTS ON THE FOURTH
DAY AND TO $1.00 ON THE SEVENTH DAY
OVERDUE.
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UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LIBRARY